I need hardly say that there are many aspects under which we may consider the Lord Jesus. There was His glory with the Father before the world was as Son of God; He is Son of man; He is High Priest of His people. He was the manifestation of truth, and everything is made manifest by the truth. There is no real truth any where but in Christ. If I knew what God is, He is not known really but in Christ. If I want to know what man is in perfection, I see him in Christ. If I want to know what sin is, “He was made sin;” I see it there, the power of death? I see it in Him. Love? It is in Him I seek it. Hatred? True, it was not in Him, but it was manifested by Him; all is known really &rough Him. “Grace and truth came by Jesus Christ.” The truth shall make you “free indeed.” And then a little lower down in the context, the “Son Flail make you free.”
We have seen Christ, as the second Adam, and the power of redemption, the real deliverance He has wrought out for us. He is “the second Man the Lord from heaven” “As is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly.” And again we have seen, from Psa. 22, where Christ has brought us. Having come out of death, raised by the glory of the Father, He praises in the midst of the congregation, and gives us to chant the same song with Him, we being brought into the condition of the second Adam before God, although we have the treasure now in “earthen vessels.” Death and resurrection are in Psa. 22.
There are two other characters regarding Christ very precious, because drawing out the affections until by and by we shall see Him. He has not only delivering power, whether by life or death, but He is an object, in glory as in humiliation; and there is a third thing. He is a Priest for us, and that character in which He is to us is connected with these new affections, not as an object, but connected with affections. Christ said, “I go to my Father and your Father.” “In that day ye shall know that I am in the Father, and ye in me, and I in you.” The congregation must not jar with His praise, and are therefore placed in the same position with Him before “My Father and your Father.” Our place before God now is in Him, the Christ in glory. Such is our place, and we are predestinated to bear the image of the heavenly. This gives us power of hope; we are excited by it to run the race; it is not so much dependence marks it (although we must always be in dependence, or fall), but the energy and joy of hope. We wait for the hope of righteousness by faith. We do not hope for righteousness, we have it, or rather we are it. Christ is the righteousness; He has entered into the glory, and this is the consequence of the righteousness. “We wait for the hope of righteousness;” we wait for the glory. The Spirit now takes of the things of Christ, and shows them unto us down here—then in glory. The law was a ministration of condemnation, the Spirit is the ministry of righteousness. When Christ was glorified, He sent the Holy Ghost down to seal our persons and make us partakers of the glory to come; the effect of this is, that beholding Him we are changed into the same image from glory to glory. This is practical realization, and it becomes fruitful in us. Seeing Christ glorified, by the Spirit, has this effect on our hearts; we are conformed to Him. It is through looking at Christ in glory.
There is another thing of great moment, namely, our looking at Christ as Priest. “When Jesus knew that his hour was come He took a towel and girded himself.” He became, in a certain sense, their servant. Whenever we see Him taking a place down here, serving, the affections are drawn out in a different way to that which excites the energy of hope. God put before Christ an object of hope, “who, for the joy that was set before him, endured,” &c. So He gives us an object to encourage us and brighten our hope all through the way. We are not counting ourselves to have already attained, “but press on towards the mark.” But when we think of ourselves in weakness and infirmity, there is the sense of dependence on One either to restore or to keep us going on. In this there is daily much exercise to be kept walking before Him (not touching what we are in Christ), and that is very fruitful. (1 John 1:77But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin. (1 John 1:7).) Am I under law? No! “We have an advocate with the Father.” (1 John 2:1-21My little children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: 2And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world. (1 John 2:1‑2).) Have I to run to Him to be forgiven? No! We run away from Him when we have sinned. He restores us as Peter. Christ looks at him directly he has committed the fault and brings him back. So now He brings our souls back by the Spirit. He is an Advocate, the One who carries on our affairs before God. The same word is also used of the Holy Ghost who carries on our affairs down here. When we fail, or there is the need that we should fail, because of self-confidence, it is Christ's work on High to bring us back to communion with the Father and the Son. 1 do not speak of our going to Him to do it, but I am dependent on Him to do it. “To humble thee, to prove thee, to know what was in thine heart.” (Deut. viii. 2.) That God does to make us discern between good and evil, which it is needful for us to discern through the fall. He sets us in righteousness first, and then carries us on by His Priesthood, maintaining the whole scene of our dependence. Christ is not so much an object to us in all this as an agent.
In this psalm (xvi.) He is more the object before the soul—our food. Christ becomes properly the good of our souls, not Christ in glory, but here in humiliation. “I am the true bread that came down from heaven;” it does not say the bread that went up to heaven. Then eating His flesh is needed for life. We must know Him as dead. We cannot feed on Him as the living, glorified Christ, but as the dead Christ. What draws out our affections to Christ is what He was down here. He was going through all the difficulties here—made His passage through everything about which He has to intercede for us.
God had His food in the offering, but there was the meat offering and part of the peace-offering which the priests ate. He says, “Therefore doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life that I may take it again.” Then we find the Father has given us the very object He delights in for the object of our affection. The Father could not be silent when Christ was here. “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.” The perfection of the object is the reason of the imperfectness of our apprehension of it, but that is the way God brings our affections into tune with Himself. He could say at the beginning, because of His intrinsic perfectness, and at the end because of His developed and displayed perfectness, “This is my beloved Son.” Then what do we say? In weakness and poverty, yet surely, each can say with unhesitating heart, I know He is perfect. We cannot reach to His perfectness, but we do feel our hearts, poor and feeble as they are, responding. The Father has shown us something of His perfectness. The Father is communicating of His delight. “This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased,” not in whom you ought to be well pleased (which is true too); but His way is to communicate to them. of His own love to Christ. It is a wonderful thing that the Father should tell of His affection for Christ, and that when He was here amongst us, the Son of man on earth amongst sinful man.
A person must know that he is righteous in Christ, before he can be attracted by this communication with Him. With the woman in the Pharisee's house it was what was revealed in Christ to her made her love much, not what she got from Him. The blessedness of what was in Christ had so attracted her and absorbed her mind that she found her way into the house, thought not of the dinner, &c. She was taken up with Him—she wept, but had nothing to say. Jesus was there. He commanded all her thoughts, her tears, her silence, her anointing of His feet—all noticed by Him, and all before she knew what He had done for her. Attracted there by what she saw in Him, she got the answer as regards peace of conscience from Himself. Now a person may be attracted by Christ, but the effect of that will be conviction of sin, and, if forgiveness is not known, the presence of Christ to the soul, becomes quite the opposite of God's righteousness, and holiness will take the form of a law. Many rest satisfied with being only thus attracted for a season, but then they can slip back into any vanity, because righteousness is not known to the conscience. Righteousness sets us in conscience before God as Christ is—in the light. If I have not peace, I cannot have fellowship with another Christian. My sins are all my thought, if my conscience is awake. “If we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship.” It does not say, if we walk according to the light; but the case stated is being in the light. The Christian state is being in the light, and we have fellowship with one another and cleanness in His sight. There is no communion in sin, but wretchedness and misery. When we are there (in the light, as He is) we can feed on Him. There is no real feeding on Him as bread come down from heaven, when not feeding on His flesh and drinking His blood. The power of death must be known before the heart can be given to be occupied with Him. The Lord gives Himself to us, and He expects us to be occupied with this affection towards Him. “If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I go to the Father. What a place! The Lord comes down here so low, takes such a place amongst men, that He reckons on their affection being such as to rejoice in His joy at going away, though it was for them to be left without Him. This affection that He looks for now cannot be known, unless He is known as salvation.
“In thee do I put my trust.” This is quoted in Heb. 2 to prove His humanity. There are two things make perfection in a man, dependence and obedience. They were in Christ, the contrast to what was in Adam when he sinned. Christ was ever the dependent and the obedient one. Independence is sin—there is the principle of sin in it. All thought of freedom from the will of another, where one's own will is at work, is a terrible thing. With Christ there was no will, but His Father's. That was not any check but motive. It is most blessed for us to see Christ taking this place of dependence. It is natural to us to say, I must do something. But no! you should not eat or drink unless He tells you. Whatever you do, do all in the name of the Lord: yet it is all liberty. No person who has his Father in his affections at all times would do anything without a desire to please Him. Love makes it perfectly indifferent to the child what is to be done. It is done to please the Father. Would not a child like, even in eating and drinking, to please his father? It is not the thing that is of consequence, but the relationship and affection to Him. Satan tempted Christ to make the stones bread, when He was hungry, and He could have done so. He might have had twelve legions of angels, but He had taken the place of dependence and waits.
His heart could be moved with compassion; not only could He show His power in working miracles, and it is seeing the place of this dependent, obedient One down here, that the heart gets food. What traits are seen in Him! Asleep on the pillow, He can rise to still His disciples' fear. When sitting, wearied on the well, He could converse with the poor woman who came there in need.
He was able in love to go through all; He was thoroughly man—able to touch others, being untouched by evil Himself. The fact of being untaintable made Him go forth in love dispensing blessing to all. “O my soul, thou hast said unto Jehovah, thou art my Lord.” (Ver. 2.) Now I take the place of a servant. Thou art my Master. To the young man in the gospel He said, “Why callest thou me good? none is good but One, that is God.” I am my master's; I am taking the place of dependence, leaning on thee, looking to thee. Then comes fellowship.
Ver. 3. “My goodness extendeth not to thee; to the saints that are in the earth, the excellent,” &c. No matter how feeble, how poor, how ignorant, they are “the excellent.” It is not what they had, but what they were. He has taken the place, going before the sheep, finding out all the difficulties because He leads, and meeting all the dangers in the path before them. There is not a step of the path of life that He has not trod. He has shown the path of divine life up to blessing. “In whom is all my delight.” All His affection flowed out to them. He takes delight in them, not necessarily in their state. There was enough in Him, and He did draw out the affection of His Father, as a man down here (of course, as the eternal Son also) in this path of life. “Thou wilt show me the path of life.” How dependent for everything He does not say, I will rise up, but “Thou wilt show me.” He passes through death in dependence on His Father; there was the blessed perfectness of a man with God; and, at the close of His career, “knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he was come from God, and went to God, he riseth from supper.” (John 13)
He could go back unsullied to the throne of God, and take man back with Him into the glory, out of which He carne. There is manhood now in the presence of God. In Matt. 3 is John's baptism. They came to Him confessing their sins: “fruits meet for repentance” were needed. The beginning of all excellence is to confess we have none. “Fruit” was confessing they had brought forth none. The instant the Spirit of God is working, Jesus goes to be baptized with them; not having any sin to confess, of course, but doing His Father's will. He takes His place with them; He had come for that; and the consequence is, that He takes His place after to praise in the midst of the congregation. He must be alone in death, but no sooner is He risen than He must have them with Him; He will be in company.
Ver. 4-8. “I have set the Lord always before me:” still dependence—perfection “because thou art on my right hand, I shall not be moved.” “Thou wilt shew me the path of life.” It is most blessed to hear Christ say this. It is the path of death in verse 10; how did He find that of life? Adam found the path of death in his fall and his self-will, but back from it never. The tree of life was never to be touched in the garden of Eden; he had taken the other path. Thus we see there are two trees all through the world—that of responsibility and the gift of God, which is life. All man does ends in death (but it is too late to speak of that); he is dead in trespasses and sins; but now Christ came, bringing life into a world that drove Him away; where Satan the prince of it was, and everything was bearing the stamp of its prince. In this place of death He makes out a path for us. He is shown by His Father the “path of life.” He was the life; but then the path of life had to be tracked through this place of death, where no one thing testifies of God—one wide waste, where there is no way. Christ has tracked the path Himself: it is for the Christian I am speaking now. The gospel shews He gives it to those who believe. He had to make out the path of life through a world of sin and wretchedness, in obedience, up to God. It must be through death for us, because we are sinners. Now He says to us, If any man serve me, let Him follow me. We must take up the cross. The cross to Him was atonement—that was the path. As He came for us, it must be by the cross. He has gone through it perfectly and absolutely. What is the consequence? The end is, “In thy presence is fullness of joy.” He would rather die than disobey. Notice, death is gone to us—the end is gained; but we have to tread this very same path that He trod up to His presence, where there is “fullness of joy.” Christ is the blessed object for our affections. Alas! how little affection we bear Him. In the wide waste of sin, “a dry and thirsty land where no water is,” He could say, “Thy favor is better than life.” Why all this? It was for His own glory and His Father's, doubtless, but it was for these “excellent of the earth” “In my Father's house are many mansions I will come again and receive you unto myself, that where I am, there ye may be also.”
We have to follow Him. It is not the quantity we do, but the measure of presenting Christ that is the value of our service; in a world where there is nothing of God. “All that is in the world... is not of the Father.” In that world the Son of the Father has marked out this path of life up to the Father. “Let my sentence come forth from Thy presence” —in the controversy with man in this path; then in the end “I shall behold thy face in righteousness:” I shall be satisfied when I awake up in thy likeness.” (Psa. 17) Here we get the two parts of the blessedness for us—with Christ, and like Him, in the Father's presence. If we were constantly before Christ, with the consciousness of not being like Him, it would be constant distress. Now we are unlike, alas! but “in thy presence is fullness of joy.” With Him and like Him we shall enjoy the light of the Father's countenance. In Rev. 4, elders are first seen sitting in peace, then prostrate in worship. In the Psalms we get Christ walking with the Jewish remnant—Christ first humbled and glorified in the end; His own experiences. Christ is the object of our study when we have righteousness in Him. When brought into blessing, we can study Him who brought us there. It is this searches the thoughts, affections, motives in the path. He must be our life to go in the path; then we go through the death in taking up His cross; then in the end we are to be like Him. The Lord give us to know the blessedness of being identified with Him, following in the path He has tracked out for us.